We have NASA’s Landsat program to thank for this rare view of the Atlantic Ocean in the Bahamas, as captured by satellite. The patterns you see are sand and seaweed beds that have been sculpted by ocean currents. That dark spot? It’s called the Tongue of the Ocean. The tongue is a deep, dark trench that separates the islands of Andros and New Providence in the Bahamas and connects to a larger geological feature known as the Great Bahama Canyon.
Satellite image of sand and seaweed in the Bahamas
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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Row, row, row your gondola
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Siblings Day
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Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act anniversary
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Lei Day in Hawaii
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It s National Hispanic Heritage Month
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White Sands National Park turns 90
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A sea of swirling stone
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Winter at Valley Forge
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Porthcawl Lighthouse, Wales, UK
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Salzburg, Austria
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Take the stairs
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Pretty, pretty…butterfly?
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Mexican giant cardon cactus
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Getting to the bottom of the underwater waterfall
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Star Wars Day
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Rolling hills of the Palouse, Washington
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Miravet, Catalonia, Spain
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International Haiku Poetry Day
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Great horned owl
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Where the glow of the holidays lingers
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Cheese! We ll go somewhere where there s cheese!
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Winnie-the-Pooh Day
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Happy Presidents Day
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Oh, happy day!
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Polar bears
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Art and soul
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World Reef Awareness Day
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Silvereyes in South Korea
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Death Valley National Parks Anniversary
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Karlovy Vary, Bohemia, Czechia
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